| Frederick FN Noronha फ्रेड्रिक न on Fri, 3 Mar 2017 08:11:31 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> INDIA-BIOMETRICS: And now... bites for all? Or, IT bites all? |
Whats in a unique number?
Linking of Aadhaar to a growing number of government entitlements is
misguided
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Written by [1]Swati Narayan | Updated: February 14, 2017 1:43 pm
Aadhaar-based mobile phone, Govt, Supreme Court, Mukul Rohatgi, JS
kHEHAR, mobile users, fraudulent activities, India news, Indian Express
[INS: :INS]
Finally, if the aim was to ensure that unsold foodgrains are not
siphoned off with accounting dodges, there are far simpler
alternatives.
LAST week the Union food ministry issued an unprecedented diktat. It
has insisted that each family member must possess an Aadhaar number
within four months, to be eligible for subsidised foodgrains under the
National Food Security Act. This ties in with the larger plan for all
ration shops by 2019 to verify Aadhaar biometrics at every transaction.
So, not only must 210 million families possess unique numbers for each
member, they must also queue up every month to prove their thumbprints.
But does this make any logical sense?
First, the ration dealer can still give less grain than the printed
receipt. Only in Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu are electronic weighing
scales connected to stem quantity deception. But they too work only
when there is electricity. Besides, the greatest pilferage occurs from
godowns, not ration shops.
Second, to weed out ghost cards and identity fraud, a one-time
exercise to match ration cards with the population
census would have been more than sufficient. Already, every single card
nationwide has been digitised and two-thirds Aadhaar-seeded to purge 20
million fake cards.
Finally, if the aim was to ensure that unsold foodgrains are not
siphoned off with accounting dodges, there are far simpler
alternatives. Bihars barcoded coupons have reduced leakages from 91 to
24 per cent within six short years. Previously, Tamil Nadu had relied
on offline handheld billing devices (similar to those with bus
conductors). Andhras ration shops now use iris scanners, with a lower
error rate than biometrics. Instead, the insistence on Aadhaar
biometrics has already wreaked havoc. The Mazdoor Kisan Shakti
Sangathan estimates that in the last few months, 38 per cent of
households in Rajasthan have not been able to match fingerprints. In
Madhya Pradesh, 20 per cent of devices have malfunctioned and have been
returned to vendors. Similarly, in Jharkhands capital, at the outset
almost half the cardholders were not able to prove their identity. Five
hundred leprosy survivors without fingers in Ranchi were insensitively
denied foodgrains for three months for want of fingerprints.
The ouster of these eligible, impoverished families is often then
heroically projected as savings. But even the best of technologies are
often no match for large-scale insider fraud. Recently, across
Karnataka, 45,000 bogus
ration cards linked to fictitious 12-digit Aadhaar numbers were
discovered. Biometrics are not foolproof the calloused fingers of
labourers and the elderly frequently throw up errors. Aadhaar also
requires continuous access to mobile signals or the internet, which is
a tall order in rural areas that barely have electricity.
A decade ago, the British Parliament passed the Identity Cards Act. The
intent was to create a National Identity Register database of all
citizens with biometrics, iris, face scans and longitudinal records of
residence. But after public outcry and escalating costs, in 2010, a new
coalition government repealed the law and the nascent database was
permanently destroyed. Australia and New Zealand too have abandoned the
idea of national biometric archives.
Indias Aadhaar project, however, has ballooned since its birth. From
April, Aadhaar will also be a must to demand work under the MGNREGA.
The Karnataka government plans to track the progress of every school
child with fingerprints. Soon newborns in Maharashtra will also be
enrolled for the magic numbers in hospitals. Never mind that their
fingerprints and irises are yet to be fully formed.
In this Big Brother Aadhaar mania, the HRD ministry has finally
sounded the alarm bell. It has questioned the Centres push to link
these unique numbers to student scholarships, which is in clear
violation of earlier Supreme Court orders. Despite the furtive
enactment of the Aadhaar Act through the backdoor as a money bill, the
apex court has repeatedly pronounced that the unique number must be
purely voluntary and cannot be made mandatory for any government
entitlement, till the matter is sub judice.
India ranks 97 of 118 countries on the Global Hunger Index. Two of
every three Indians are guaranteed foodgrains under the National Food
Security Act. One of every five rural households depends on MGNREGA
work. Let an increasingly Orwellian Digital India, in the guise of
Aadhaar, not eat into these lifelines.
The writer is a visiting research scholar at the London School of
Economics and Political Science from the Tata Institute of Social
Sciences
http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/aadhaar-number-subsidised-foodgrains-national-food-security-act-whats-in-a-unique-number-4521285/
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